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		Hong Kong's Foreign Correspondents' Club suspends top Asian human rights 
		awards
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		 [April 25, 2022] 
		By James Pomfret 
 HONG KONG (Reuters) - Hong Kong's Foreign 
		Correspondents' Club (FCC) has suspended its annual Human Rights Press 
		Awards so as not to "unintentionally" violate any laws, according to a 
		statement from the club president on Monday.
 
 The cancellation of the awards, run for over a quarter of a century and 
		among the most prestigious in Asia, is the latest blow to media freedoms 
		following the introduction of a national security law in 2020 to bring 
		the former British colony into line with the rest of China.
 
 FCC president Keith Richburg, a former veteran Washington Post 
		journalist and current head of the University of Hong Kong's journalism 
		school, said in the statement the awards had been suspended given 
		"significant areas of uncertainty and we do not wish unintentionally to 
		violate the law."
 
 Richburg had explained to the club's human rights committee that the 
		decision was made to protect its staff and members from legal risks, 
		according to the minutes of a meeting obtained by Reuters.
 
 The minutes spelled out potential risks arising from proposed awards for 
		Stand News, a liberal online news portal that was forced to shut in 
		December after several of its top editors were arrested on suspicion of 
		publishing seditious articles.
 
		
		 
		"Keith explains decision ... to suspend the HKPA (Human Rights Press 
		Awards) due to concerns over legal risks to the club, staff, members and 
		judges from awarding four awards and five merits to Stand News," the 
		email read. 
		The FCC board, which includes journalists from Reuters Breakingviews, 
		the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg and others, made the 
		decision to suspend the awards on Saturday, having already completed the 
		judging process. 
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			The logo of Foreign Correspondents' Club (FCC) is seen outside its 
			building in Hong Kong, China January 11, 2022. REUTERS/Tyrone Siu/Files 
            
			 Two members of the club's human 
			rights committee told Reuters that eight committee members resigned 
			subsequently. 
 Hong Kong was promised a high degree of autonomy and freedoms not 
			seen in mainland China, including free speech and a free press, 
			under a "one country, two systems" agreement in 1997 on its handover 
			from British to Chinese rule.
 
 Advocacy groups and some Western governments say authorities are 
			trampling on those freedoms, with a crackdown intensifying under the 
			national security law that has seen civil society groups disbanded, 
			democratic activists arrested or forced into exile, and media 
			outlets shuttered.
 
 Earlier this month, Hong Kong's national security police arrested 
			Allan Au, a veteran journalist and former contributing writer with 
			Stand News, for alleged sedition.
 
 Hong Kong authorities reject assertions they are cracking down on 
			freedoms.
 
 (Additional reporting by Jessie Pang; Writing by Anne Marie Roantree; 
			Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore)
 
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